• Posted by Konstantin 03.09.2008
    Google Chrome logo

    Geeks all over the world have just gained a new hot topic to flame or panic about. Web designers now have to verify their applications and websites against a yet another browser. Developers learned about that new open-source embeddable Javascript engine. All the normal people will have a choice of a yet another, hopefully well-made, browser to work with. Thus groweth the Church of Google.

    What is it to Google? Apart from the obvious increase in the user base and the potential to advertise suggest websites right in the address bar, wide distribution of Chrome should somewhat increase the amount of user-generated traffic flowing into Google servers. Indeed, the default configuration of Chrome, equipped with that marvelous auto-suggestion feature, seems to start sending stuff out as soon as you type your first character into the address line.

    Although the term "privacy violation" is the first one to pop out, let's keep that aside for now. The really interesting question concerns the nature of this constant influx of half-typed URLs and "search terms", annotated with timestamps and host IPs. Firstly, it most certainly contains additional value over whatever is already indexed in the web: global events, current social trends, new websites, ideas and random creative thoughts leave a mark on your address line. It therefore makes sense to look into this data and search for patterns. Secondly, the volume of this data stream is probably quite large whilst the noise is significant, hence it does not pay off to store it somewhere. And that's where we reach a nice observation: for many purposes you don't need to store this data.

    If the bandwidth of the stream is constantly high, you can afford to throw it away. If at any moment you should need data, just turn on the sniffer "put your bucket in", and you'll collect megabytes of interesting stuff in a matter of seconds, if not less. A simplistic version of such kind of "stream analysis" looks as follows: you ask Google "what do people read right now", it then listens to the stream for a second and responds with something meaningful, and I believe much cooler things can be thought of. Anyway, the important point is that no "global" indexing or data collection is needed to perform this service, just a thumb on the pulse of the web.

    Posted by Konstantin @ 6:52 pm

    Tags: , , ,

  • 4 Comments

    1. Jevgeni on 05.09.2008 at 03:13 (Reply)

      Well, at least you'll have two readers 🙂

      BTW I'm thinking this year to put up a site where people can comment anonymously on teachers and supervisors (to protect from situations when a bright student gets a "D" or supervisor disappearing in the middle of the term). Should be quite easy technically, but needs some promotion in school and I'm not much connected to it anymore. Are you interested?

      1. Konstantin on 05.09.2008 at 03:27 (Reply)

        Hello, my dear late-night colleague 🙂

        Well, at least you’ll have two readers

        I plan to have the number of readers n grow exponentially with the number of posts x: n = 2x-1. Seems to work so far.

        Are you interested?

        You mean something like this? I don't think that will work, but you can try to convince me (and I'm not sure that this question deserves a pseudo-public discussion here, but you're welcome, if you wish).

        BTW the ideas "I want to put a site about students and teachers" and "I'm not much connected to school anymore" contradict each other slightly, don't you think?

        1. Jevgeni on 05.09.2008 at 04:44 (Reply)

          You mean something like this? I don’t think that will work, but you can try to convince me (and I’m not sure that this question deserves a pseudo-public discussion here, but you’re welcome, if you wish).

          Yep. I saw it as well some time ago. Though I got my idea from Unfounded 🙂

          I wouldn't hide my association anyway, so I don't really care. But we can switch to semi-private discussion as well 😀

          BTW the ideas “I want to put a site about students and teachers” and “I’m not much connected to school anymore” contradict each other slightly, don’t you think?

          Doesn't bother me.

      2. Konstantin on 05.09.2008 at 23:07 (Reply)

        Oh, I've figured out a cool domain name for the project. Take "Õps", the estonian jargon for "teacher", add "rate.ee", and you get a meaningful russian "opsirate.ee". Hurry up while the domain is not taken! 🙂

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